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SYSTEMIC PROBLEMS • Poverty • Climate Change • Ageing Population • Credit Crunch!

SYSTEMIC PROBLEMS • Poverty • Climate Change • Ageing Population • Credit Crunch!. • Money is created as Debt • Creation of money is a banking monopoly • Compound interest is charged • Exponential effect - individually/globally. SOLUTIONS ?. • Mitigating the worse effects of the system

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SYSTEMIC PROBLEMS • Poverty • Climate Change • Ageing Population • Credit Crunch!

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  1. SYSTEMIC PROBLEMS• Poverty • Climate Change• Ageing Population• Credit Crunch! • Money is created as Debt • Creation of money is a banking monopoly • Compound interest is charged • Exponential effect - individually/globally

  2. SOLUTIONS ? • Mitigating the worse effects of the system • Campaigning for change • Building a new paradigm - from Debt to Asset-based investments • Complementary Currencies *

  3. *COMPLEMETARY SYSTEMS • Parallel to mainstream currency • Fiat or created by member-trading • In any area of society or politics • Top-down or member-member • Geographically or Peer-based • Hours, currency, or favours

  4. Altruism - the Gift Economy • based on natural friendly behaviour • non-zero-sum, ie your gain is my gain • for further details http://www.altruists.org/ Transaction PLUS PLUS = ++ and sometimes +++

  5. “Fiat” Currency Issuing currency into the economy was historically the responsibility of the king or government, who had the power of “seignorage” but in the UK only a small amount of cash and notes are still produced in this way (from the Royal Mint). Most currency is created by the banking system as mortgages against property. There is no zero-sum - it is created as required so the money supply gradually expands. Examples of Complementary Fiat Currencies • Guernsey - post-war legal tender • Ithaca Hours - USA • Salt Spring Dollars • Argentine Creditos

  6. Inner and Outer Economies

  7. Commercial Barter • Business to business • Market - “Offers and Wants” • Broker-driven • Sterling Commissions Virtual “clearing” may take place to help manage budgets within companies and between organisations.

  8. LocalExchangeTrading(LETS) • Voluntary, self-organised = has Governance & Rules • Community: based on locality or other common bond • Private Currency - ring-fenced for this community • Market is established: - directory of “Offers and Wants” • Meetings help members to meet up • Member-to-member negotiations and trading • Variety of accounting mechanisms - eg Passbooks, Cheques, Vouchers (event currencies), Web-transactions • Cost of service paid in local currency • Zero-sum including admin account: NB “Mutual”.

  9. Accounting in Barter and LETS Example: • Four members have traded • 10 units have changed hands • Overall turnover is 20 • Overall balance is zero In barter if the broker fee is 10% he would earn one unit of national currency, maybe 5% from each side In LETS it is more likely that a regular monthly fee in local would be taken, maybe 1 unit per month - this goes to a system account from which administrators claim payment.

  10. Different Styles of LETS Systems • 1985 Canadian model developed from David Weston’s “green dollars” +Michael Linton’s LETS • up-front monetary approach • value-free technical approach • adapted from commercial barter ie commission-based • interested in scaling up into major currency systems • lightweight “governance” In practice there is a continuum between these two Schemes • adapted for the UK by Liz Shephard =LETSlink • community association • core-group roles and tasks • adopt value-rich local “green/community agenda” • much variation in practice • tend to prefer exclusivity • heavyweight “governance” eg constitution agreed by members at AGMs, etc

  11. Volunteering ApproachTimebanks • Simplified and de-monetized (only speak about community, never about currency) but currency is actually the “hour” • Based on government’s volunteering agenda: “top-down” • Designed to reach vulnerable individuals - eg police-checking • Hour-based - value of people’s time is counted as equal • Trading controlled from office - jobs booked in advance so whereabouts of participants is known in advance • Top-down - participants are “clients” not members • Reciprocity is “encouraged”, not required • Reward-token system - (fiat) - no system account • Depends on funding - salaried “broker” - could limit trading

  12. LETS - systemic weaknesses • was too poorly resourced centrally to provide much support so lack of common standards led to wide variations • voluntary effort means dependence on group processes and tendency to stay within comfort zone - no outreach • paper-based systems encouraged groups to limit their size by methods such as asking for renewal of subscriptions ! • shrinking markets result in low levels of trading • extreme balances can develop due to insufficient feedback • heavy workload and stress lead to organiser burnout • developing relationships between members = altruism !

  13. New Ways Forward • go web-based to reduce workload, save money, and provide better management and communication tools • review governance to promote common standards and more uniform, professional, co-ordinated approach • outreachto promote more activity between members and use project-based activity for “quantitative easing” • improve co-ordination nationally and regionally

  14. NewINTEGRATEDCOMMUNITY CURRENCY“ ICC” Model • Combines best of existing systems • Well-designed customisable printed items for local use, eg Cheques, Vouchers, Passbooks, Fliers etc • Web-based systems to support administration • Direct member to member accounting enabled • Buddy system for computer access and training • Choice of Hours, Currency, Gift, Cash transactions *New: “Commons” projects for currency creation * New: National hour-based transfer system

  15. LETSlink UK Strategy • Support existing groups by analysing management styles and group processes, and providing training where needed, including local networking/resourcing. • Provide software which helps set common standards but is also adaptable to local requirements • Design city-wide regional currencies with local neighbourhood networks to fill gaps in local provision. • Introduce LETS to existing community, artistic, enterprise, co-housing, and activist groups to support their volunteering and campaigning work.

  16. Contacts & Links LETSlink UK: 12 Southcote Road, London N19 5BJ • 020-7607-7852 www.letslinkuk.net

  17. Finding your Local Group

  18. UK Map

  19. The Southeast

  20. Hampshire

  21. Isle of Wight

  22. Contact Us

  23. Submit Message

  24. Let’s look at another county

  25. Click into KWINLETS

  26. Click on Kings Lynn

  27. Click on Learn More

  28. What’s on Offer?

  29. What are people looking for?

  30. Let’s use the Joining Form

  31. OK, let’s try logging in

  32. Now explore inside the site

  33. What else can I do?

  34. Inside my own profile

  35. Now look at NORLETS

  36. Go to Members’ Area

  37. Now to the West Country

  38. And Bath LETS

  39. Another front site design

  40. Go to Members’ Area

  41. One more - North London LETS

  42. Goodness knows what goes on ...

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